ENGLAND, OF THE TEN TRIBES OF ISRAEL.
CHAPTER XVII.
"The Saxons were a Gothic or Scythian Tribe; and of the various
Scythian nations which have been recorded, the Sakai, or Sacae, are
the people from whom the descent of the Saxons may be inferred,
with the least violation of probability." Sharon Turner's History
of the Anglo-Saxons, vol. i. p. 100.
"The fact that we have six or seven hundred words in our language
of Persian origin, agrees with our own origin amongst the Persians,
but not [as] of them. Hebrew Roots, too, are amongst our homeliest
words." - Dr. Moore's Lost Tribes, p.91.
F.R.A. Glover: How
is England of the Ten Tribes?
About some 120 years before the events occurred, which were the
basis of the Argument of the first fifteen Chapters of this Book,
- viz., the breaking up of the Polity and Rule of the House of
Judah, by its removal from Jerusalem to Babylon, - Phul,
Tiglath-Pileser (II Kings 15:29), Shalmaneser (I Chron. 5:26), &c.,
led away the Israelites captive. They were deported to the
depopulated cities of the Medes, off the Caspian Sea, in the
territory lying between the rivers Araxes and Gozan, B.C. 720.
[JML: In accordance with the Assyrian practice of displacing and
scattering captured peoples to avoid nationalist rebellions.] This
done, by the will of the Lord, they, worthy of punishment, were
punished. But, though erring children, they were Sons of Jacob and
Children of Abraham, and neither of the Patriarchs would God fail
because of the unworthiness or sin of their descendants (Gen.
28:15). So, after punishment, came reconciliation, and
thenceforward prosperity and multiplication; enlargement of their
border and manifestation of power. They stretched up northwards, by
land and by sea; and, as a powerful nation, by the name of Sakae
(tzaa-chi), or the Tribes of Isaac (Isaac, "House of Isaac," Amos
7:9, 16. Heb. tzakhak, laughter; hence 'Isaac.' Gen. 18:12, 21:6),
overlaying the northern sea-board of the Caspian, were the first
people who could say to the conquering Alexander, "Turn about and
return by the way that you came, for here you shall not pass." And
he did turn back.
As to their adoption or acquisition of the name of Sakae, by which
they and their descendants subsequently were known, it appears
that, after the separation of the Ten Tribes, when they, in their
pride and arrogance, refused to be ruled over by a Son of Judah,
and renounced thus the hopes and promises connected with the House
of David, they arrogated to themselves the title of "the Sons of
Isaac:" for it was not until after that event they were known by
the name of "the House of Isaac," as synonymous with the Israel of
Jeroboam (amos 7:9, 16).
"This is," as Dr. Moore observes (It is to be noted that this
learned layman, who seems here to touch the position of the
Deistical writers in the "Essays and Reviews," can hardly have had
them in his mind, as his book was written apparently before theirs
was published), "memorable. They did not think, by this rejection
of God's anointed, to reject the hopes of Israel, but rather, in
their wilfulness, appeared to fall back upon the anterior promise,
and to look for blessing and power in the name of Isaac, the true
seed of Abraham;" [when as yet there was no blessing by Israel to
a pre-eminent Prince of Judah; but, in whom, certainly, all the
nations of the earth should be blessed.] "They arrogated the right
of dominion, in this name, when occupying the hills of Samaria; and
it is, therefore, highly probable, that when the conquering
Assyrian king drove all their families from their fatherland, they
still boasted of their descent from Isaac. They preferred to mingle
idol-worship on high-places with their traditional ritual; and
thought, perhaps, with the opinionated and Cain-like spirit of
refiners of God's ordinances, to honour Jehovah more, by calling
Him Baal, or Lord of All, than by worshipping Him as the God of
their fathers, and the chosen people only. The origin of the name
of Sacae, or Sakai, for the inhabitants of that part of Armenia,
which the Sacae occupied after the expulsion of the Scythians, is
thus naturally accounted for. That they should be confounded with
the Scythians is equally natural, especially as there is reason to
suppose that they afterwards colonized amongst that wide-spread
race of marauders, and gave their name to the country they occupied
beside the Massa-Getae [JML: see Herodotus' Histories]. They
attained so conspicuous a position amongst the Scythian nations,
from superior arts, power, and industry, as at length to give their
royal name to the dominant part of that race. It is at least
remarkable that the name Sacae is not applied by the Classic
historians and geographers to any tribe of the Scythians until some
time subsequent to the exile of the House of Isaac." - pp. 97-99.
Ultimately, as Sakae, these people spread out westward and
eastward. And, after many changes of place and power, of those who
came westward, some became the Angles of England. They were
followed later by other off-slips of the same determined race,
named Sons of Sakae (Sakasones, Suni = Söhne, Ger. sons). Lo! the
origin of the Anglo-Saxons, - that ever-advancing Race, who have
since occupied all England, and absorbing the Scottish and Irish,
have at length spread themselves out into a "nation of nations"
(Gen. 48:19). [JML: The name "Anglo-Saxons" appears to have been
devised by the Venerable Bede to harmonize the two alternative
names for the same people].
There are three very striking - what may be called popular - marks,
by which this descent of England from Israel may be seen:
(1) the Wittena Gemote, the evidence of the Medo-Persian residence
of the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxons, - such institution, in name
and thing, being, identical with the same custom, so named also,
and so used by the Persians; (There are numerous words in the
Persian language which are, in sound and signification, precisely
the same in the old English ; we will only instance one:
Witten-a-gemote, which, in both tongues, literally means a national
assembly. Huet says, the German language bears a great affinity to
the Persian. The cause of this may be imputed to their common
origin from the Scythians." - Pennie's Historical Drama, 530.)
(2) the Seven-Day weekly division of time, still known among us
under the names of the gods whom they, during their heathendom,
held sacred [JML: table of heathen day names omitted]; and
(3) their use of the Three Yearly Feasts of the Hebrews (Deut.
16:16), the Passover, of which the Saxon heathen name [JML: !]
still remains in use amongst us, as Easter, the Feast of Weeks, as
Whit-Sunday, [JML: Pentecost, traditional day of first communion,
when penitents wore white] - and the Feast of Tabernacles, by the
Anglo-Saxons, when they were still lost in the slough of Wodenism.
See Wilson, p. 128.
For further proof on this interesting subject, the Reader is
referred to a Book of "Lectures on Ancient Israel," setting forth
"Our Israelitish Origin,"
by Mr. Wilson (Nesbit). This learned
layman commenced to lecture upon it at the instance, it seems, of
a valuable and eminent servant of the Church (Rev. Peter roe,
Kilkenny); who was desirous that what he had himself heard might be
delivered in every city and town in Ireland. This was at once set
about; and as well also, many chief places in Scotland and England
benefited by this valuable witness's 'labour of love.' The
substance of the fourteen Lectures has been in print for now
twenty-one years [JML: since 1840?], and the Book has gone through
many editions.
Mr. Wilson has collected all that is sufficient, in proof of this
case, in his Lectures, to which the Reader is referred: to cite
passages in proof is out of the question: it would be to reprint
the whole book.
In the mean time, Mr. Wilson's authorities for his facts and
deductions are chiefly Mr. Sharon Turner, Rapin de Thoyras, and the
Abbé Milot, from his work, entitled, "Elements of the History of
England:" all of whom, without being at all aware that they are
speaking to the case, and viewing things, in general, from quite
different points, most curiously illustrate the theory of Mr.
Wilson; which is, .. That the purpose of God has been overruling
the actings of His people, (the sons of Joseph,) in such a manner,
that their greatness and power is rather the result of a destiny
than any ordinary issue of effect from cause: that they have been
made great, in spite of themselves; their mistakes having been so
overruled, as to work out the advantage of the nation. Thus, he
says,
"All changes He hath overruled for their good. The wonderful manner
in which they withstood, as it were, the world at the commencement
of this century [JML: Napoleonic Wars, War of 1812 etc.]; and in
which they have been enriching it with their wise and useful
inventions, more and more ever since, is most worthy of note; and
all this they are to ascribe, not to chance, but to the goodness of
the God of their Fathers, who had promised so to defend them, and
so to cause them to be for blessings unto all the nations of the
earth. In their case are manifested, not the supposed freaks of
blind fortune, but the good providence of the God of Israel."
"That this people have been wondrously dealt with is acknowledged,"
continues Mr. Wilson, "by those who have had the best opportunity
of judging: by those who have studied their history in comparison
with other nations." - p. 120.
" How impenetrable are the decrees of Heaven!" exclaims the Abbé in
astonishment,as he contemplates the events in succession. He
concludes his summary of the events of our History in these words:
"To this very imperfect summary of the principal epochas, let us
add, the detail of those laws successively established, to form a
rampart to liberty, and lay the foundation of public order; the
progress of letters and of sciences, so closely connected with the
happiness and glory of States: the singularities of the English
genius, profound, contemplative, yet capable of every extreme; the
interesting picture of parliamentary debates, fruitful in scenes,
the variety and spirit of which equally strike us. The reader will
easily conceive that this history is unparalleled in its kind."
[What wonder! is it not the history of Joseph?] "In other
countries, princes, nobles, fill the entire theatre; here, men,
citizens, act a part which is infinitely more interesting to man."
- p. 121. [Wilson.]
In page five of his Preface to his third Edition, in 1844, Mr.
Wilson laments that the dissemination of his views has not been
undertaken by the Clergy, and others, and public teachers, "whose
position in society was advantageous for their dissemination to the
extent that is desirable." Of this "desirable extent," it is
possible that an estimate of that is formed elsewhere. When the
time comes for action, men's minds will doubtless be moved. The
fact may be, that men may see a War Rocket in that which Mr. Wilson
deems to be only a Signal; and that the Political Corollary to Mr.
Wilson's Religious Proposition is a Fire-Work not to be ignited,
heedless of the political issues of a national adoption of his
hypothesis. In the mean time, notwithstanding all the apparent
apathy on the subject, multitudes of earnest and deeply-religious
men have imbibed the great truth that Mr. Wilson was privileged to
proclaim. That the seed was not spread broad-cast in vain, if his
own experience have not already assured him abundantly, not only
may these pages satisfy him, but those of another learned layman,
from whose recent publication I think it right to make the
accompanying extract.
"A work was published some time since, (by Mr. Wilson of Brighton)
entitled 'Our Israelitish Origin' This was too much opposed to the
views of popular expositors to be received with the candour it
deserved; but it must be acknowledged that Mr. Wilson, in that
work, has done much more to meet the requirements of prophecy, than
any that preceded him: and, although we dare not follow him into
all the results to which he would lead us, still he has shown a
large amount of probability, and indeed very much of the letter of
Scripture, in favour of the opinion he has advocated, viz., that
the Saxons are the descendants of the Israelites as distinguished
from the Jews. Mr. Wilson has not advanced any direct evidence of
Saxon connexion with Israel by descent; but he has indicated a
great deal in the Anglo-Saxon character and customs which accords
better with the notion of our Israelitish origin, than with any
other explanation of our peculiarities."
"Could we but find the broken link in the chain, by which the Sakai
or Sacae are supposed to have been connected with the Israelites,
[JML: now identified via Dan's "Serpent's Trail", Gen. 49:17] we
should be at no loss to discover some of the modes in which the
wondrous prophecies, so apparently contradictory and paradoxical,
concerning the outcast tribes, have been fulfilled in their
descendants: for here we are, the Anglo-Saxons, with mind and heart
imbued with the history and hopes of Israel, elevated and enlarged
by the sublime doctrines and predictions of their sacred seers,
sages kings and prophets, singing the songs of Zion in our temples,
living in the noble expectation of universal blessedness under the
glorious reign of the King of Salem, and desiring and endeavouring
to promote the coming of His kingdom in all lands. The
[Anglo]-Saxons embrace the world; and the devout amongst them
realize, in faith and spirit, the visions of all true prophets and
seers that have been since the world began ; and now anticipate the
period when a King, shall reign in righteousness and princes rule
in judgment. (Isa. 32.) What could converted Israelites do more?"
- Dr. Moore's Lost Tribes, pp. 94, 95.
But granting what Sharon Turner, and Rapin, and others have
declared as suggestive of this descent of the Anglo-Saxon races
from the lost tribes deported into the Heathendom of Medo-Persia,
and the many marks existing, among us, political, social, and
domestic, by which the identity of this people with the Tribes of
Israel is established, upon what ground can any one assume that
England is entitled to be considered as the representative of
Joseph?
From:
"England, the Remnant of Judah, and the Israel of Ephraim",
written by F.R.A. Glover, M.A., Chaplain to the Consulate at
Cologne. Published by Rivingtons, London, 1861. Based on research
commenced in 1844.